scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Natasha Sarah Crowcroft | Q61100890 |
Jordan Lee Tustin | Q89918397 | ||
Dionne Gesink | Q89918399 | ||
Ian Johnson | Q89918403 | ||
Jennifer Keelan | Q89918407 | ||
P2860 | cites work | Negotiating vaccine acceptance in an era of reluctance | Q26822929 |
Strategies for addressing vaccine hesitancy - A systematic review | Q26995086 | ||
Research Conducted Using Data Obtained through Online Communities: Ethical Implications of Methodological Limitations | Q27826359 | ||
Assessing and Responding in Real Time to Online Anti-vaccine Sentiment during a Flu Pandemic | Q30395056 | ||
Social network sites as a mode to collect health data: a systematic review | Q30837802 | ||
Anti-vaccine activists, Web 2.0, and the postmodern paradigm--an overview of tactics and tropes used online by the anti-vaccination movement | Q34029837 | ||
Addressing the vaccine confidence gap. | Q34191703 | ||
A postmodern Pandora's box: anti-vaccination misinformation on the Internet | Q34615342 | ||
Broad reach and targeted recruitment using Facebook for an online survey of young adult substance use. | Q36029726 | ||
Beyond Traditional Newspaper Advertisement: Leveraging Facebook-Targeted Advertisement to Recruit Long-Term Smokers for Research | Q37053712 | ||
Purposeful selection of variables in logistic regression | Q37077675 | ||
Targeted Facebook Advertising is a Novel and Effective Method of Recruiting Participants into a Human Papillomavirus Vaccine Effectiveness Study | Q37156227 | ||
Can Facebook Be Used for Research? Experiences Using Facebook to Recruit Pregnant Women for a Randomized Controlled Trial | Q37314483 | ||
Understanding vaccine hesitancy around vaccines and vaccination from a global perspective: a systematic review of published literature, 2007-2012. | Q38193651 | ||
The Use of Facebook in Recruiting Participants for Health Research Purposes: A Systematic Review | Q38635957 | ||
Facebook Recruitment of Vaccine-Hesitant Canadian Parents: Cross-Sectional Study | Q41288944 | ||
The impact of confounder selection criteria on effect estimation | Q43670469 | ||
Parental views on pediatric vaccination: the impact of competing advocacy coalitions | Q44596129 | ||
The influence of vaccine-critical websites on perceiving vaccination risks. | Q46036837 | ||
Googling children's health: reliability of medical advice on the internet | Q50304445 | ||
YouTube as a source of information on immunization: a content analysis. | Q51478309 | ||
Reevaluating the need for concern regarding noncoverage bias in landline surveys. | Q53059698 | ||
On the epidemiologic notion of confounding and confounder identification | Q73213827 | ||
The influence of narrative v. statistical information on perceiving vaccination risks | Q83743456 | ||
Sources and perceived credibility of vaccine-safety information for parents | Q83896171 | ||
Confidence about vaccines in the United States: understanding parents' perceptions | Q84305243 | ||
P433 | issue | 1 | |
P921 | main subject | immunization | Q1415366 |
P304 | page(s) | e7 | |
P577 | publication date | 2018-01-19 | |
P1433 | published in | JMIR public health and surveillance | Q27726893 |
P1476 | title | Internet Exposure Associated With Canadian Parents' Perception of Risk on Childhood Immunization: Cross-Sectional Study | |
P478 | volume | 4 |